During his first public appearance as an Arizona Wildcat, freshman Ira Lee didnât need to shoot, run or defend anybody to show he was physically ready for college basketball.
All the 6-foot-7-inch, 235-pound forward had to do was slip on Khalil Tateâs football jersey during pregame hoopla before the Oct. 20 Red-Blue Game âĻ and nearly bust out of the thing.
âI said âOK, Iâll do itâ until I actually put the jersey on and realized how tight it was,â Lee said, having OKâd a request from equipment manager Brian Brigger. âI still went with it, and I liked the idea.â
The football gesture worked on several levels. Lee said he agreed to wear the jersey of UAâs star quarterback because both of them are from Los Angeles, but Lee is also built like a tall tight end himself â and happens to have football blood inside him.
His father, Zeph, was a running back and defensive back who played for USC and several pro teams including the Oakland Raiders and Arizona Rattlers. Zeph Lee passed down his approach to sports to his son.
âIra has a motor that I think he got from his dad a long, long time ago,â UA coach Sean Miller said. âHe and his dad have really a special relationship. He gave Ira the love of sports but really what he gave him was a work ethic. He pushed him in a great way to really go for it, work hard, and good things will happen.
âIra brings that mindset every day to practice, and wherever he is today heâll be even better in the future.â
Considering that Lee is a power forward on this particular Arizona team, having that sort of mindset is something of a necessity for daily survival.
During any given practice, Lee might need to escape a block by Keanu Pinder, or fend off the rangy Emmanuel Akot. He might need to stop the almost-unstoppable offense of Dusan Ristic down low, or try to stay in front of savvy Duke transfer Chase Jeter.
And, of course, there are also moments when Lee has to try to do something â anything â to slow down Deandre Ayton.
âDeandre?â Lee said, pausing and smiling when asked what it is like facing him. âDeandreâs 7-1 and 260 pounds. Heâs a big dude. So youâve gotta do your work early with him.â
Itâs all work, all the time. Different types of work. But Lee isnât complaining.
âHonestly, it prepares me well,â he said. âHaving to guard Deandre, heâs a really unique talent. Heâs a big guy who has touch and can finish around the basket. Then Keanu is a defensive guy so itâs just learning to get to the basket and create my own shots off of him.
âI also have to guard Dusan, whoâs a really skilled big man, and then Emmanuel is an all-around guy so I have to guard him on the perimeter.
âSo I get a really well-balanced practice.â
Of course, Lee brings his own unique set of skills to the competition, too: His combination of energy, size and athleticism isnât easily found.
âHe can check the box in a lot of areas,â Miller said. âHe rebounds at both ends and he defends. Heâs very athletic and when the game gets going fast, he can make tremendous plays on both sides of the ball.
âHeâs not a guy who needs to hunt shots and needs to score. So heâs a fun guy to have on your team and part of your program.â
Those personality traits are a good thing for the Wildcats, too. Even though the four-star talent may be physically ready, and motivated, all that talent around him means playing time wonât come easily.
Lee and Pinder are expected to be the two primary backups in the post behind Ristic and Ayton, though Akot could play power forward in small-ball situations, which could further shave a bit from Leeâs minutes.
Lee says heâs used to playing on supremely talented teams. In high school, he played at nationally competitive Sierra Canyon High School before finishing at Santa Monica Crossroads. In travel ball, he joined the well-regarded Oakland Soldiers and Earl Watson Elite.
Heâs not running away from competition this time, either.
âMetal sharpens metal,â Lee said. âWe make each other better every day and thatâs why we came here. We could have easily gone to places where we could average 20 and start but we wanted to be somewhere where weâd get better every day playing with the best.â



